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Arts With Aloha

By Judy Babcock Wylie

Like museums? Forget New York. Book a flight to Honolulu, where you can spend your entire vacation within the cool, high walls of the city’s many fine art, culture and history museums. If you must get a tan, you can always sit in courtyards studded with sculpture, enjoying the sun and the sound of water falling into ponds of water lilies.  Don’t worry about being bored: you’ll be too busy  learning  ancient hula chants or  ogling wooden bowls studded with human and dog teeth at the Bishop Museum; standing in the Victorian-era room where the last member of the sole American royal family was held prisoner  at the Iolani Palace, having  lunch  at the restaurant located in the Honolulu Academy of Arts, where the food is so good it has been praised by Food and Wine and Bon Appetit magazines. You also could find yourself   buying an in-your-face  wall hanging  of a 4x5- foot metal aloha shirt at the Contemporary Museum.    

“Arts of Aloha” is a program that makes it easy to find these and other  kinds of cultural thrills in Honolulu.  You can get a free 32-page color brochure explaining all the museums and art venues involved and a schedule of events by calling   808/532-8713 or writing HAA, Arts with Aloha Brochure, 900 S. Beretania Street, Honolulu, HI 96814. You can also  check out  their Web site,  www.artswithaloha.com.

The group includes the Bishop Museum, the Honolulu Academy of Arts and Shangri La (former home of Doris Duke),  the Iolani Palace, the Hawaii Opera Theater,  the Hawaii Theater,  Diamond Head Theater,  Ballet Hawaii,  the Mission Houses Museum,  The Contemporary Museum, the Honolulu Symphony, the University of Hawaii Art Gallery, the Manoa Valley Theater, and the Hawaii State Art Museum.

What’s New

One of the newest members is Shangri La, the former private estate of millionairess Doris Duke. One of the best new experiences in town, a tour of the estate is $25 and meets at the Honolulu Academy of Art in the Islamic Gallery, as Duke collected Islamic art. Then a van takes guests to the estate on the slopes of Diamond Head. The tours will be offered for the first time November, 2002; call 866/385-3849 ( DUKETIX) for reservations.  The other new Arts of Aloha member is the Hawaii State Art Museum, (downtown across from the Iolani Palace) which features 5,000 pieces of contemporary art created since 1970 by artists living in Hawaii.  Admission here is free. 

We explored several of the Arts of Aloha sites (plus the Bishop Museum, not technically part of the group but not to be missed)  the last time we were in Honolulu.  Here’s a run-down of a few of our favorites:   

The Bishop Museum

How it looks:  Like a cluster of elegant Victorian-era  museums. Ornate, high-ceilings, beautiful wood beams and carved pillars. 

What it covers: Culture and history of Hawaiian people, their arrival from Polynesian, the ritual garments of royalty, such as capes woven of feathers, bowls studded with human teeth. 

Don’t miss: The daily culture show with serious hula dancing, and music by played on ancient instruments, ritual wooden bowls, historic photos of missionaries.  Try the all-day cultural experience that includes a Hawaiian lunch, hula and lei-making  instructions, and talks on native music, art and history.

Best things in the gift shop: Wooden koa boxes, Hawaiian quilts, books on ancient navigation.

Honolulu Academy of Art:

How it looks: A beautiful rambling Moorish-Spanish building containing 30 galleries wrapped around five lovely courtyards.   

What it offers: Ancient Asian, European, and contemporary art and sculpture, Islamic art, Japanese woodblock prints donated by author James Michener, Japanese Shingon Buddhist treasures.

Don’t miss: The serene courtyards; the fabulous restaurant (try the beef tenderloin sandwich or the Piadina wrap with prosciutto, arugula, parmsesan cheese and pesto sauce). 

Best thing in the gift shop: Inexpensive batik clothing, jewelry

The Contemporary Art Museum

 How it looks: A sprawling  contemporary mansion on a hill, lush gardens

What it covers: Contemporary prints, paintings, sculpture

Don’t miss: The canyon gardens, the spectacular view of the city

Best thing in the gift shop: This is the most exciting  gift shop in the city, with avant garde original art and art objects, sculpture, jewelry—even  wedding brooms, all made by artists living in Hawaii.

The Iolani Palace

How it looks: A Victorian style palace built in 1882

What it covers: The poignant story of the ten-year reign of King Kalakaua and his family. It is the country’s only royal palace now open to the public.

Don’t miss: the crazy quilt sewed by Queen Liliuokulani  during her eight months of imprisonment in the palace after the fall of the monarchy in 1893. 

Best thing in the gift shop: Books on Hawaiian royal history

The Mission Houses

How it looks: Modest coral block buildings that housed the first missionaries.

What it covers: The history of the Sandwich Island Missions, where most missionaries were from New England; furniture,  stories of local incidents, historic Hawaiian collectibles.

Don’t miss: The printing press and the quilt collection

Best thing in the gift  shop: Hawaiian quilting kits,  quilt- design earrings 

Arts with Aloha, www.artswithaloha.com;
Honolulu Academy of Arts and Shangri La, www.honoluluacademy.org
The Contemporary Museum, www.tcmhi.org
Mission Houses  Museum, www.missionhouses.org
Hawaii State Art Museum, www.state.hi.us/sfca/

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